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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:02,803 --> 00:00:04,736 So, no risk of rain today. 2 00:00:04,771 --> 00:00:08,440 Just a glorious English summer's afternoon. 3 00:00:12,245 --> 00:00:15,180 Welcome to the start of Wimbledon 2008. 4 00:00:18,618 --> 00:00:20,251 As is tradition, of course, 5 00:00:20,287 --> 00:00:25,424 the defending men's champion will play the first match on the center court. 6 00:00:25,459 --> 00:00:31,830 Roger Federer beginning his campaign for a six successive Wimbledon title. 7 00:00:35,135 --> 00:00:39,304 I fell in love with Wimbledon because of its tradition, its history 8 00:00:39,339 --> 00:00:41,773 that you just feel very honored and privileged 9 00:00:41,808 --> 00:00:44,743 to be playing on such a perfectly laid grass court. 10 00:00:44,778 --> 00:00:47,446 You know that somebody has been going around with the scissors 11 00:00:47,481 --> 00:00:50,182 and making sure that every blade of the grass is perfect. 12 00:00:54,855 --> 00:00:58,290 A super performance from the defending champion. 13 00:01:03,897 --> 00:01:08,333 Rafael Nadal, clearly, he is a better player 14 00:01:08,368 --> 00:01:12,104 than he was even a year ago when he pushed Roger Federer in the final. 15 00:01:13,840 --> 00:01:15,574 Well played, Roger Federer. 16 00:01:18,320 --> 00:01:20,720 I knew I had played a good tournament 17 00:01:20,880 --> 00:01:23,240 and was close to winning. 18 00:01:24,280 --> 00:01:27,640 But it was tough at the time, 19 00:01:27,680 --> 00:01:31,280 because I didn't know if I would ever have another chance to win Wimbledon. 20 00:01:33,560 --> 00:01:36,462 First point for the man from Mallorca. 21 00:01:47,841 --> 00:01:48,874 - Just two breaks in the match. - 6-4. 22 00:01:48,909 --> 00:01:51,743 But it's a three sets win for Rafael Nadal. 23 00:01:51,778 --> 00:01:55,580 He is on his way for Wimbledon 2008. 24 00:02:08,495 --> 00:02:11,630 Roger's the greatest balletic mover that tennis has ever seen. 25 00:02:13,300 --> 00:02:14,766 One of the greatest ball strikers, 26 00:02:14,801 --> 00:02:16,869 you know, phenomenal, you know, beyond belief. 27 00:02:22,742 --> 00:02:23,842 Game Federer. 28 00:02:26,813 --> 00:02:29,548 The defending champion, yet, to drop a set. 29 00:02:41,595 --> 00:02:43,128 And Federer. 30 00:02:43,163 --> 00:02:45,697 Federer simply in a different world at the moment. 31 00:02:47,400 --> 00:02:49,935 And it's not a world with too many players inhabit. 32 00:02:54,007 --> 00:02:55,840 Give him a chance, Roger! 33 00:03:00,046 --> 00:03:04,616 He's been in the zone for the last five years here at the all-in club. 34 00:03:19,065 --> 00:03:20,232 Oh! 35 00:03:22,402 --> 00:03:27,439 A rampant Rafael Nadal in superb form. 36 00:03:27,474 --> 00:03:31,743 Rafa has got that intensity and energy that's so debilitating to opponents. 37 00:03:35,081 --> 00:03:38,516 So intimidating that it tires you out mentally. 38 00:03:38,551 --> 00:03:41,620 Rafael Nadal through to the quarter finals. 39 00:03:50,764 --> 00:03:52,564 Unbelievable shot. 40 00:03:55,869 --> 00:03:57,435 Too strong. 41 00:03:57,470 --> 00:03:58,971 Absolutely relentless. 42 00:04:03,543 --> 00:04:05,844 No doubt that there's been some surprises, you know, 43 00:04:05,879 --> 00:04:11,349 especially Andy and Novak losing and when you see this draw sort of being narrowed down 44 00:04:11,384 --> 00:04:13,885 and you see that Rafael is the big favorite, you know, on the other section, 45 00:04:13,920 --> 00:04:15,854 and I'm a big favorite in my section, 46 00:04:15,889 --> 00:04:20,292 obviously, you start thinking more about the, you know, a possible final. 47 00:04:21,461 --> 00:04:22,927 Game set... 48 00:04:22,963 --> 00:04:26,265 It will be six finals in a row for Roger Federer. 49 00:04:31,638 --> 00:04:34,306 It will be the dream final. 50 00:04:34,341 --> 00:04:36,708 -Federer against Nadal. - Three sets to love. 51 00:04:44,984 --> 00:04:46,885 I've seen a lot of tennis matches 52 00:04:46,920 --> 00:04:49,588 and I've commentated a lot and watched a lot and played a lot. 53 00:04:51,024 --> 00:04:52,824 If you add everything together, 54 00:04:54,894 --> 00:04:57,696 there's no question into my mind overall 55 00:04:59,032 --> 00:05:02,801 the 2008 match between Rafa and Roger 56 00:05:04,104 --> 00:05:06,738 was the greatest tennis match ever. 57 00:06:27,654 --> 00:06:28,620 I'm well prepared. 58 00:06:28,655 --> 00:06:30,789 I've had a good championship so far, you know, 59 00:06:30,824 --> 00:06:35,627 and I always think Rafa as the-- as the test, sort of what I was hoping for. 60 00:06:36,996 --> 00:06:40,064 I mean Rafa is a great competitor. 61 00:06:40,099 --> 00:06:43,935 And every time I'm going to play him, I want to try to beat him, you know. 62 00:06:43,970 --> 00:06:49,073 Federer says I know how to play Rafa, I know what I have to do. 63 00:06:49,108 --> 00:06:52,076 Do you know what you have to do to beat Roger Federer on grass? 64 00:06:52,111 --> 00:06:53,478 No. No. 65 00:06:57,517 --> 00:07:02,720 I'll only try my best, you know, go on court, try to play my best tennis, 66 00:07:02,755 --> 00:07:05,824 try to put my rhythm, the intensity and 67 00:07:05,859 --> 00:07:08,760 later if he plays better than me and he beats me, 68 00:07:08,795 --> 00:07:11,596 just congratulate him like-- like every year. 69 00:07:19,739 --> 00:07:22,540 Wimbledon is that distant magical place that you-- 70 00:07:22,575 --> 00:07:26,945 across the ocean that had this aura about it and this beauty. 71 00:07:35,321 --> 00:07:39,591 There's a magic to Wimbledon that players feel. 72 00:07:41,327 --> 00:07:43,862 It is a combination of where you're playing, 73 00:07:44,831 --> 00:07:46,198 who you're playing 74 00:07:47,200 --> 00:07:48,867 and the quality of tennis. 75 00:07:53,239 --> 00:07:54,739 You know, the tension 76 00:07:56,175 --> 00:07:57,609 and the excitement, 77 00:08:04,117 --> 00:08:08,053 everything is just so close to the forefront of your emotions. 78 00:08:20,567 --> 00:08:25,537 The match I played with Borg in '80 was often talked about as one of the greatest, 79 00:08:25,572 --> 00:08:27,739 if not the best match that people had seen. 80 00:08:28,908 --> 00:08:33,144 And once that great tension in the men's final. 81 00:08:33,179 --> 00:08:34,980 A tie break in the fourth set. 82 00:08:37,784 --> 00:08:39,985 I think we brought out the best from each other. 83 00:08:41,988 --> 00:08:43,922 We gave always a hundred percent. 84 00:08:46,759 --> 00:08:50,795 I had this tailor-made like super start. 85 00:08:50,830 --> 00:08:54,966 I like to think I made him a better player but he certainly made me a better player. 86 00:08:56,102 --> 00:08:57,569 Oh! 87 00:09:00,239 --> 00:09:04,809 I knew that I had to bring out my A-game every time I stepped on the court with Martina. 88 00:09:07,246 --> 00:09:08,846 Yes. 89 00:09:08,881 --> 00:09:12,584 When I played Chris, you know, it's this mind games you play against each other 90 00:09:12,619 --> 00:09:13,818 when you know each other that well. 91 00:09:15,321 --> 00:09:18,690 Especially when you do have contrasting styles. 92 00:09:24,697 --> 00:09:27,198 And Nadal and Federer embody that. 93 00:09:30,670 --> 00:09:37,008 The key to a great rivalry is contrast, and you couldn't have more polar opposites. 94 00:09:38,911 --> 00:09:44,148 Roger, when he's walking on the Centre Court at Wimbledon looks, so relaxed, 95 00:09:44,183 --> 00:09:48,787 just embraces the environment and does it in a way that doesn't use extra energy. 96 00:09:56,729 --> 00:10:02,200 Rafa is someone with high energy, high intensity. 97 00:10:02,235 --> 00:10:06,371 Look, we've seen what he does with the bottles on the court, likes things in a certain order, 98 00:10:06,406 --> 00:10:09,207 wants a lot of stuff done certain ways. 99 00:10:10,343 --> 00:10:14,346 I remember seeing Nadal in his sleeveless shirt, 100 00:10:15,281 --> 00:10:16,948 bulging biceps. 101 00:10:19,152 --> 00:10:23,655 And then right next to him he'd got what looked like a prince. 102 00:10:23,690 --> 00:10:25,223 Not a hair out of place. 103 00:10:27,126 --> 00:10:29,961 I like that lefty-righty, the way they dress, 104 00:10:29,996 --> 00:10:32,964 the way they act, their temperaments, their personalities. 105 00:10:34,067 --> 00:10:37,068 Rafa, you know, he's the swashbuckler. 106 00:10:38,037 --> 00:10:41,439 But, you know, he's more emotional and he wears his emotions more on sleeves. 107 00:10:41,474 --> 00:10:43,741 You can sort of see what he's feeling more. 108 00:10:43,776 --> 00:10:46,310 And Roger's, you know, sort of the ever the classy, 109 00:10:46,345 --> 00:10:48,880 you know, almost perfect guy like Borg was. 110 00:10:50,483 --> 00:10:54,752 So, Federer, twenty-six-year-old, maestro from Switzerland. 111 00:10:54,787 --> 00:10:58,223 Number one in the world since February 2004. 112 00:10:59,158 --> 00:11:00,658 He's going for title number six. 113 00:11:00,693 --> 00:11:04,963 It was something not even the great Swede Bjorn Borg could achieve. 114 00:11:05,998 --> 00:11:09,400 It's hard enough to feel the pressure of having to win a tournament. 115 00:11:09,435 --> 00:11:11,803 But when you're going for six in a row, 116 00:11:11,838 --> 00:11:16,174 I did the six in a row, you know you'll never ever have the chance again, never. 117 00:11:16,209 --> 00:11:18,443 So the pressure is exponentially greater. 118 00:11:19,779 --> 00:11:25,016 Everybody talked about this match and I was the umpire, the spectator of this beauty. 119 00:11:25,051 --> 00:11:26,351 Here comes Roger. 120 00:11:28,755 --> 00:11:33,925 The tennis I was able to watch, the-- the players we had, tournament it was. 121 00:11:35,294 --> 00:11:39,731 I believe as well, you know, I'm sorry I don't want to feel like a big head, 122 00:11:39,766 --> 00:11:42,133 but I believe that officiating was great as well. 123 00:11:44,570 --> 00:11:46,171 Roger Federer... 124 00:12:13,800 --> 00:12:14,866 Oh-fifteen. 125 00:12:16,536 --> 00:12:19,771 It's just fantastic, isn't it? Straight out of the blocks. 126 00:12:19,806 --> 00:12:23,441 Both players look like they are timing the ball well, constructing the rallies well. 127 00:12:37,456 --> 00:12:40,425 In tennis, you have to put your opponent away. 128 00:12:41,394 --> 00:12:44,929 We have to always win the last point to get over the finish line. 129 00:12:46,960 --> 00:12:50,560 Each point I play and every ball I hit has the intention, 130 00:12:51,240 --> 00:12:53,040 of harassing the opponent. 131 00:12:54,440 --> 00:13:01,480 Finding a way for that shot to win me the point. 132 00:13:06,085 --> 00:13:07,818 A break-up serve, it is. 133 00:13:07,854 --> 00:13:12,423 First bluff to the Spaniard in his attempt to win Wimbledon for the first time. 134 00:13:13,459 --> 00:13:15,860 Nadal leads two game to one. 135 00:13:15,895 --> 00:13:20,031 I do believe that as a tennis player it's-- it's constant problem solving 136 00:13:20,066 --> 00:13:22,934 and trying for solutions and trying out things. 137 00:13:25,037 --> 00:13:27,171 On the surface, if you're just watching as a spectator, 138 00:13:27,206 --> 00:13:29,307 you might just look, oh, these guys' play so good. 139 00:13:37,483 --> 00:13:42,353 But all the little decisions we have to take in every point, in every game, 140 00:13:42,388 --> 00:13:45,156 in every match and every tournament, there are so many of them. 141 00:13:46,559 --> 00:13:49,026 The biggest difference between any other sport and tennis 142 00:13:49,061 --> 00:13:51,162 is that you have nobody else to talk to. 143 00:13:51,197 --> 00:13:52,496 You have a coach but he can't talk to them. 144 00:13:52,531 --> 00:13:55,033 You have to problem-solve by yourself. 145 00:14:03,976 --> 00:14:07,511 Most fundamentally, Federer is a sporting aristocrat. 146 00:14:07,546 --> 00:14:13,852 He embodies virtues such as effortlessness, pure skill, talent, artistry. 147 00:14:17,623 --> 00:14:21,459 These are reflected both in his person, in the way he carries himself 148 00:14:21,494 --> 00:14:24,195 and more fundamentally in the way he plays tennis. 149 00:14:25,298 --> 00:14:29,133 Nadal stands for effort and its associated qualities-- 150 00:14:31,203 --> 00:14:34,572 endurance, muscle power, fortitude, stamina. 151 00:14:41,180 --> 00:14:43,681 And those fundamental differences which are there all the time 152 00:14:43,716 --> 00:14:46,551 when they play each other, they really come to a head. 153 00:14:53,092 --> 00:14:56,361 I think that's probably the biggest difference how they both feel the game. 154 00:14:57,330 --> 00:15:01,900 Roger with a lot more flexibility on-- on what he does because of his God-given talent. 155 00:15:02,969 --> 00:15:06,070 And Rafa with his tenacity and his will to win. 156 00:15:07,080 --> 00:15:09,480 The opponent serves and then you need to return. 157 00:15:11,640 --> 00:15:15,640 So you have to go from something that is very explosive, very athletic, 158 00:15:16,120 --> 00:15:19,120 to something calm, with a lot of feeling, 159 00:15:19,680 --> 00:15:22,280 with anticipation and harmony. 160 00:15:34,600 --> 00:15:38,960 And to combine these two opposites 161 00:15:39,000 --> 00:15:40,600 results in a good game. 162 00:15:48,514 --> 00:15:50,214 A loss at set point. 163 00:16:08,734 --> 00:16:10,735 This is top tennis now. 164 00:16:16,108 --> 00:16:18,109 Tennis is a very cerebral game. 165 00:16:19,078 --> 00:16:21,713 You have to be able to deal with the ups and downs. 166 00:16:23,749 --> 00:16:26,317 An advantage for Federer. 167 00:16:26,352 --> 00:16:27,719 We are back to this game. 168 00:16:28,721 --> 00:16:30,555 The point is you have to know yourself. 169 00:16:35,528 --> 00:16:36,661 Oh. 170 00:16:38,497 --> 00:16:41,466 That's a real body blow. 171 00:16:54,547 --> 00:16:56,247 Advantage Nadal. 172 00:17:11,163 --> 00:17:12,363 Game for a set. 173 00:17:15,634 --> 00:17:17,068 Nadal. 174 00:17:17,103 --> 00:17:18,302 Sixth game to four. 175 00:17:21,000 --> 00:17:22,760 I believe doubts are good 176 00:17:23,760 --> 00:17:29,160 because they keep you alert at all times, regardless of your opponent. 177 00:17:30,280 --> 00:17:35,800 Never considering myself good enough and always having that doubt 178 00:17:35,840 --> 00:17:42,240 Constantly pushes me to improve. 179 00:17:59,080 --> 00:18:03,080 I think he played way better than me. 180 00:18:05,280 --> 00:18:06,680 I wasn't able to do anything. 181 00:18:06,880 --> 00:18:10,320 I didn't play as well as the other days, like I wanted to play, 182 00:18:10,360 --> 00:18:12,360 but, whatever. 183 00:18:16,262 --> 00:18:20,397 I'm a big believer that behind every champion there is a force, 184 00:18:20,432 --> 00:18:23,667 there is a father, there is a mother, there is a grandmother, there is a coach, 185 00:18:23,702 --> 00:18:27,505 there is somebody that actually is a force behind this individual. 186 00:18:28,760 --> 00:18:31,200 Rafael began to train as a kid, every day. 187 00:18:31,240 --> 00:18:34,640 Every day, every single day of his life, 188 00:18:35,520 --> 00:18:38,120 as if it was a tennis tournament. 189 00:18:38,160 --> 00:18:39,760 As if he was playing a final. 190 00:18:44,600 --> 00:18:47,000 I always thought that to make it to the top... 191 00:18:47,840 --> 00:18:49,640 would be hard, 192 00:18:52,360 --> 00:18:57,360 and that we would have to face many kinds of problems. 193 00:18:58,520 --> 00:19:02,720 That's why I always tried to foster in Rafael a tough personality, 194 00:19:02,760 --> 00:19:06,560 to be able to withstand such difficulties. 195 00:19:08,560 --> 00:19:11,360 My ambition would be to get to the highest level. 196 00:19:14,200 --> 00:19:19,600 But for the moment, I'm here, I'm 112 in the world, 197 00:19:20,400 --> 00:19:24,680 and there's still a long way. You have to keep trying, improving, everything. 198 00:19:24,720 --> 00:19:26,520 It's not easy at all. 199 00:19:30,880 --> 00:19:33,320 Well in that time he wasn't the Nadal that we all know now. 200 00:19:33,360 --> 00:19:38,080 I was practicing with him very frequently in Mallorca, 201 00:19:38,120 --> 00:19:40,000 so we knew each other very well. 202 00:19:47,000 --> 00:19:50,240 During that time I won a Grand Slam, 203 00:19:50,280 --> 00:19:51,760 I was number one in the world. 204 00:19:58,040 --> 00:20:01,640 I remember that in practice I almost always beat him, 205 00:20:02,520 --> 00:20:08,800 but once you began to play with him on the court, he turned into a machine. 206 00:20:11,720 --> 00:20:14,920 The first time we played an official tournament was in Hamburg. 207 00:20:20,440 --> 00:20:25,400 I started playing professionally when I was very young, 16, 208 00:20:25,440 --> 00:20:32,480 so I was not as strong as the other players. 209 00:20:35,160 --> 00:20:38,000 Because the ball came to him a bit faster, he hit it a bit late... 210 00:20:41,840 --> 00:20:45,760 and he began to lift his arm more than he was supposed to. 211 00:20:55,920 --> 00:20:58,560 And he realized that was also helping him win. 212 00:21:00,400 --> 00:21:05,560 He's able to play a type of tennis that hadn't been seen before. 213 00:21:13,800 --> 00:21:16,280 Making it so quickly to the professional circuit, 214 00:21:16,320 --> 00:21:20,280 made me find solutions to be competitive 215 00:21:21,520 --> 00:21:22,840 and that's the truth. 216 00:21:23,048 --> 00:21:28,386 A sixteen-year-old has just put up one of the world's best players. 217 00:21:28,200 --> 00:21:33,400 But it's clear that he had a killer instinct inside the court, 218 00:21:33,440 --> 00:21:37,800 an ambition that I could only wish I had half of. 219 00:21:38,000 --> 00:21:39,720 The tournament you'd most like to win? 220 00:21:40,280 --> 00:21:41,000 Wimbledon. 221 00:22:09,561 --> 00:22:10,961 This was Federer's house. 222 00:22:10,996 --> 00:22:13,063 This is where he was unbeatable. 223 00:22:13,098 --> 00:22:14,765 Nobody beat this guy. 224 00:22:15,634 --> 00:22:18,469 And Nadal was trying to bring his clay-court game, 225 00:22:18,504 --> 00:22:22,807 his baseline game, to bear on the grass at Wimbledon. 226 00:22:39,691 --> 00:22:40,891 Fifteen-Oh. 227 00:22:48,600 --> 00:22:51,502 We talk about the intensity of Rafael Nadal 228 00:22:51,537 --> 00:22:53,737 and we don't talk about that with-- with Roger. 229 00:22:53,772 --> 00:22:56,140 He's so relaxed, so this and that, yeah, yeah. 230 00:22:58,010 --> 00:23:03,514 But when the ball is hit, the intensity level is exactly the same. 231 00:23:14,660 --> 00:23:16,894 Federer definitely looking like he's finding that rhythm, 232 00:23:16,929 --> 00:23:21,031 that groove on his serve, which we've seen, which has been ever present this tournament. 233 00:23:26,872 --> 00:23:28,672 Okay, boys, good luck to you both. 234 00:23:31,844 --> 00:23:36,046 There's a difference between a brilliant tennis player and a champion. 235 00:23:40,986 --> 00:23:45,889 And many brilliant tennis players don't become champions. 236 00:23:45,924 --> 00:23:51,662 And until you taste victory at the very highest level, you don't know how to do it. 237 00:23:55,834 --> 00:23:57,701 Game, set match, Federer. 238 00:24:03,542 --> 00:24:04,875 You always dream about it. 239 00:24:06,678 --> 00:24:09,913 You go and play with your friends when you're ten years old and you-- you go on-- 240 00:24:09,948 --> 00:24:13,083 on the lawn in the backyard and you play Wimbledon there. 241 00:24:15,187 --> 00:24:21,225 And finally, after years of underachievement, Federer wins Wimbledon. 242 00:24:29,234 --> 00:24:32,603 Now I'm-- I'm much more relaxed going into Grand Slams 243 00:24:32,638 --> 00:24:34,938 just because I don't have to prove it like I used to. 244 00:24:34,973 --> 00:24:37,708 Game, set match, Federer. 245 00:24:37,743 --> 00:24:41,278 And Roger Federer has confirmed his ranking as the number one player in the world 246 00:24:41,313 --> 00:24:42,746 in emphatic fashion. 247 00:24:48,820 --> 00:24:52,789 I think when Roger arrived on tour, he put the tennis to another level. 248 00:24:52,824 --> 00:24:54,958 To him, Wimbledon is the most important tournament, 249 00:24:54,993 --> 00:24:57,495 it's always the tournament he wants to win. 250 00:25:06,171 --> 00:25:08,973 Federer just kept on beating everybody. 251 00:25:12,311 --> 00:25:14,745 I think he really has a passion for the game. 252 00:25:14,780 --> 00:25:16,981 Otherwise he would never have gone this far. 253 00:25:18,116 --> 00:25:22,686 Federer's game is very much dialogue with tennis' past. 254 00:25:23,722 --> 00:25:27,291 You see some of Borg's smoothness around the court, 255 00:25:28,160 --> 00:25:31,595 you see the explosive side of Sampras, 256 00:25:32,931 --> 00:25:34,298 you see a bit of Laver. 257 00:25:36,368 --> 00:25:38,702 He took elements of the old style. 258 00:25:38,737 --> 00:25:44,341 And on top of that, he superimposed a very powerful topspin baseline game. 259 00:25:46,600 --> 00:25:49,280 When something looks easy, it does not mean that it's easy. 260 00:25:50,360 --> 00:25:53,400 It means that Roger is able to do something very difficult. 261 00:25:55,654 --> 00:25:56,854 Yes! 262 00:25:59,720 --> 00:26:02,760 He's a lot more complex than the majority of players, 263 00:26:02,800 --> 00:26:04,200 much more creative. 264 00:26:08,367 --> 00:26:09,833 Actually when I was young, 265 00:26:09,869 --> 00:26:14,004 I never thought I could play tennis the way I'm playing it right now. 266 00:26:14,039 --> 00:26:16,940 I always knew there was some hidden talent in me 267 00:26:16,975 --> 00:26:19,376 with my strokes and with my style of play, 268 00:26:19,411 --> 00:26:23,581 but that I could actually explore it as much as I did now. 269 00:26:25,317 --> 00:26:27,151 It's for me also a big surprise. 270 00:26:39,765 --> 00:26:43,000 Roger Federer is the greatest all-around talent I've ever seen. 271 00:26:43,035 --> 00:26:45,802 So he's up among, you know, the greatest of all time. 272 00:26:45,837 --> 00:26:49,806 Let's be honest, Borg won five in a row, okay, five in a row, 273 00:26:49,841 --> 00:26:52,042 and that's along with six French's. 274 00:26:52,077 --> 00:26:56,280 So that's why you have to put him up there in the highest echelons of the sport. 275 00:26:57,315 --> 00:27:00,884 If he stays up at this level, he's going to have at least a couple more Wimbledon, 276 00:27:00,919 --> 00:27:04,054 he's going to win at least another Open or so, an Australian, 277 00:27:04,089 --> 00:27:06,123 and he's going to challenge for the French. 278 00:27:06,158 --> 00:27:09,426 I mean without a doubt this guy's got by far and away the best chance to-- 279 00:27:09,461 --> 00:27:10,728 to win the French Open. 280 00:27:13,131 --> 00:27:14,732 Then Nadal came along 281 00:27:16,168 --> 00:27:20,104 and put a pressure on him that he's just-- he's never had before. 282 00:27:26,945 --> 00:27:29,846 Roger Federer coming out for what is undoubtedly 283 00:27:29,881 --> 00:27:34,184 the most significant match in his entire career to date. 284 00:27:35,387 --> 00:27:40,758 For the first time he is playing in the final of the French Open at Roland Garros. 285 00:27:42,794 --> 00:27:48,265 At the moment Roger Federer is in a long list of great champions 286 00:27:48,300 --> 00:27:50,834 who've never won at Roland Garros. 287 00:27:50,869 --> 00:27:55,972 McEnroe, Connors, Sampras, of course, Edberg, Becker. 288 00:27:56,007 --> 00:27:58,742 They could never master the red clay. 289 00:27:59,544 --> 00:28:02,112 Rafael Nadal, 2005, 290 00:28:02,147 --> 00:28:04,948 who came here and became the first man since Mats Wilander 291 00:28:04,983 --> 00:28:07,818 to win the title on his first appearance. 292 00:28:09,554 --> 00:28:14,925 He's looking today for his sixtieth successive victory on clay courts. 293 00:28:16,161 --> 00:28:18,762 Rafa is born to compete against Roger. 294 00:28:19,898 --> 00:28:21,432 First, Rafa is lefty. 295 00:28:22,300 --> 00:28:25,168 He's right in life but he's lefty on the tennis court. 296 00:28:25,203 --> 00:28:27,370 You don't have many lefty in the top hundred, so you-- 297 00:28:27,405 --> 00:28:32,509 you don't practice much with lefty and you don't play much against lefties on the tour. 298 00:28:32,544 --> 00:28:34,278 So it's something you have to adapt. 299 00:28:36,481 --> 00:28:40,550 And with Rafa playing the huge topspin in which the ball bounce very high, 300 00:28:40,585 --> 00:28:43,487 it's very tough on the one hand backhand to play over the shoulder. 301 00:28:44,990 --> 00:28:47,424 So it was always a challenge for Roger. 302 00:28:52,130 --> 00:28:55,265 I think Nadal was probably the first one to ask him questions 303 00:28:55,300 --> 00:28:57,067 that he was unable to answer. 304 00:28:59,971 --> 00:29:05,442 Nadal owns this place and he's such a tough competitor. 305 00:29:05,477 --> 00:29:10,881 Roger, for a few years he didn't have anyone really contesting him and he won so easily. 306 00:29:10,916 --> 00:29:14,584 For like three years, I mean, he was just no-- no disrespect to Philippoussis and Roddick 307 00:29:14,619 --> 00:29:16,286 but they weren't, you know, Nadal. 308 00:29:16,321 --> 00:29:19,056 And so I felt like he's-- he's been challenged here. 309 00:29:21,893 --> 00:29:23,761 I think Nadal was necessary. 310 00:29:24,496 --> 00:29:28,532 People saying Federer is unbeatable, he's got no weaknesses. 311 00:29:28,567 --> 00:29:32,136 And then Nadal came along with this very particular game. 312 00:29:33,605 --> 00:29:37,908 In-- in some larger sense you can only say that the gods of tennis sat around 313 00:29:37,943 --> 00:29:40,277 and thought the game is becoming unbalanced 314 00:29:41,379 --> 00:29:46,950 and, in a sense, he was put on earth purely for the purpose of defeating Federer. 315 00:30:01,533 --> 00:30:03,633 He's a fighter and 316 00:30:03,668 --> 00:30:06,069 he's a grinder and he deserves it to win here I think. 317 00:30:06,104 --> 00:30:08,371 - Well, you deserve to win too, Roger. -Thank you. 318 00:30:08,406 --> 00:30:10,073 We'll see at Wimbledon. 319 00:30:14,346 --> 00:30:16,213 New ball, three. 320 00:30:16,248 --> 00:30:20,450 These two, it's a fantastic rivalry and-- and we sit here watching today's match 321 00:30:20,485 --> 00:30:24,855 and-- and I don't think anyone really knows which way it's going to go. 322 00:30:24,890 --> 00:30:26,423 We are living our match, you know, 323 00:30:26,458 --> 00:30:29,860 obviously the-- the players making history, not the officials. 324 00:30:29,895 --> 00:30:34,364 We-- we're part of the-- of the game, we're part of the match, but we are, 325 00:30:34,399 --> 00:30:37,134 there is two plus one. 326 00:30:39,905 --> 00:30:42,539 Real atmosphere bubbling up in here. 327 00:30:59,691 --> 00:31:01,024 Game Nadal. 328 00:31:21,579 --> 00:31:23,080 Game Nadal. 329 00:31:43,601 --> 00:31:45,202 Yeah, it's pepped enough. 330 00:31:46,271 --> 00:31:48,705 And Nadal is very much back in this set. 331 00:31:55,520 --> 00:31:58,160 I think I'm the kind of person that 332 00:31:58,200 --> 00:32:01,400 always gives it my all. 333 00:32:03,560 --> 00:32:05,920 Competition is about winning. 334 00:32:38,456 --> 00:32:41,992 What have you got to do to win a point against Rafael Nadal? 335 00:32:44,195 --> 00:32:46,596 Rafa is the greatest fighter I've ever seen on the tennis court. 336 00:32:46,631 --> 00:32:49,232 And I played Connors thirty times. 337 00:32:49,267 --> 00:32:52,135 I know what it's like to play guys that seem like every point 338 00:32:52,170 --> 00:32:55,171 is the last point they're ever going to play and that's-- 339 00:32:55,206 --> 00:32:59,109 it's inspiring but it's-- it's-- it's also intimidating. 340 00:33:05,483 --> 00:33:07,584 Disappointment for the Federer camp. 341 00:33:07,619 --> 00:33:08,585 Advantage Nadal. 342 00:33:08,620 --> 00:33:09,953 Amazement from the crowd. 343 00:33:09,988 --> 00:33:12,322 Ladies and gentlemen, as a courtesy to the players, 344 00:33:12,357 --> 00:33:15,058 remind to be quiet during the balls. 345 00:33:25,136 --> 00:33:26,169 Game Nadal. 346 00:33:28,406 --> 00:33:31,608 He has forced his way back into this set 347 00:33:32,877 --> 00:33:35,545 and will serve for a two-set lead. 348 00:33:35,580 --> 00:33:38,381 Nadal leads five game to four. 349 00:33:38,416 --> 00:33:40,316 Second set. 350 00:33:40,351 --> 00:33:42,586 Is the great man running out of ideas? 351 00:33:44,689 --> 00:33:47,657 He's certainly got to make something happen pretty soon. 352 00:33:48,860 --> 00:33:51,428 He's certainly running out of time, it would appear. 353 00:33:53,131 --> 00:33:56,566 And it's set point for a two set lead to the Spaniard. 354 00:34:06,244 --> 00:34:12,382 Two sets it is to Rafael Nadal, the five-time defending champion. 355 00:34:13,418 --> 00:34:16,053 Well, he's got a mountain to climb now. 356 00:34:17,455 --> 00:34:19,723 Nadal leads by two sets to oh. 357 00:34:21,426 --> 00:34:24,360 The first two sets when I look back at that finals, you know, 358 00:34:24,395 --> 00:34:28,231 it's like I played them but maybe I was a bit-- 359 00:34:29,234 --> 00:34:30,467 how do you-- how do you say it? 360 00:34:31,937 --> 00:34:34,071 I'm not sure if I really believed that I was going to win the match. 361 00:34:40,178 --> 00:34:44,180 My problem was that I had lost in the French Open finals a month earlier 362 00:34:44,215 --> 00:34:46,583 against Rafa in a terrible way. 363 00:34:49,080 --> 00:34:53,040 Rafael, I think he had a great year in clay courts 364 00:34:54,240 --> 00:34:56,280 so we went to Roland Garros, 365 00:34:56,320 --> 00:35:00,560 and I believe Rafael played his best tournament. 366 00:35:01,766 --> 00:35:06,403 Rafael Nadal had been trying to reel in Roger Federer for years. 367 00:35:07,672 --> 00:35:10,340 This guy just plays so hard every point. 368 00:35:11,609 --> 00:35:17,347 And then finally he absolutely thrashed Federer in a way that he'd never done before. 369 00:35:17,382 --> 00:35:19,382 A rare vision. 370 00:35:19,417 --> 00:35:24,587 Roger Federer without that confidence, without the champion's body language. 371 00:35:24,622 --> 00:35:27,157 That was destructive tennis. 372 00:35:28,660 --> 00:35:30,660 Federer looked like an old man that day. 373 00:35:30,695 --> 00:35:33,163 Right now he's embarrassed to be out there. 374 00:35:33,198 --> 00:35:34,364 He just doesn't know what to do. 375 00:35:35,720 --> 00:35:38,640 Game, set and match, Nadal. 376 00:35:39,560 --> 00:35:42,560 6-1, 6-3, 6-0 377 00:35:42,640 --> 00:35:46,776 I think he was affected by this loss in-- in Paris. 378 00:35:46,811 --> 00:35:50,313 You maybe try to forget or you try to put it in the-- 379 00:35:50,348 --> 00:35:52,883 in the background that you lost that badly. 380 00:35:57,655 --> 00:36:00,457 I wish it was a different outcome. I wish I could have-- 381 00:36:01,459 --> 00:36:03,993 Look, it doesn't matter to-- now what happened, you know, 382 00:36:04,028 --> 00:36:07,330 I mean the match is over, clay court season is over. 383 00:36:08,666 --> 00:36:11,968 If you see Nadal the way he plays, 384 00:36:12,003 --> 00:36:13,770 it was like I remember first seeing him, I'm like 385 00:36:13,805 --> 00:36:16,206 this guy's going to be one of the greatest clay court players at-- 386 00:36:16,241 --> 00:36:20,177 of all time, that's a given. But I don't know if that's going to translate on grass. 387 00:36:23,781 --> 00:36:28,718 2006 and then 2007 Rafa was knocking on the door. 388 00:36:30,321 --> 00:36:34,824 And it was a time where he was the king of clay, I was the king of grass. 389 00:36:35,693 --> 00:36:37,460 All of the tennis world would be watching. 390 00:36:45,280 --> 00:36:47,160 Wimbledon is a very special tournament, 391 00:36:47,880 --> 00:36:53,800 Personally, I always dreamt of playing on grass, 392 00:36:54,320 --> 00:36:58,680 because it's pretty much the only tournament where that can be done. 393 00:37:03,855 --> 00:37:06,789 Federer has never been challenged like this in a Wimbledon final. 394 00:37:06,824 --> 00:37:09,025 He's never gone the distance, he's never gone to five sets, 395 00:37:09,060 --> 00:37:11,494 he's never been two sets to one down. 396 00:37:11,529 --> 00:37:14,564 That-- that point you say, okay, no, no, Rafa can maybe win Wimbledon 397 00:37:14,599 --> 00:37:16,533 and he's going to be in-- in Rogers' head. 398 00:37:18,636 --> 00:37:20,670 Second championship point. 399 00:37:27,945 --> 00:37:29,479 It's five in a row. 400 00:37:30,415 --> 00:37:31,581 Fantastic. 401 00:37:37,200 --> 00:37:38,320 It was 2007. 402 00:37:40,840 --> 00:37:44,560 I felt bad in the sense that... 403 00:37:46,960 --> 00:37:50,560 I wasn't able to overcome the adversities in such an important moment. 404 00:37:52,040 --> 00:37:53,320 That hurt. 405 00:38:13,491 --> 00:38:15,758 Is there a way back in for Federer? 406 00:38:15,793 --> 00:38:19,429 There's no doubt. He has the ability, but right now down two sets. 407 00:38:19,464 --> 00:38:23,032 Does even he have the belief, and that's what we're going to have to find out. 408 00:38:23,067 --> 00:38:25,902 It's going to be very hard for him to turn it around right now. 409 00:38:29,374 --> 00:38:31,808 What if Nadal beats him on grass? 410 00:38:31,843 --> 00:38:35,545 Well, if he beats him on grass everything changes. 411 00:38:36,414 --> 00:38:37,747 Everything. 412 00:38:37,782 --> 00:38:40,750 The-- the landscape would shift completely. 413 00:38:53,798 --> 00:38:55,832 30-40. 414 00:38:55,867 --> 00:38:58,668 I think Roger was feeling that Rafa was getting better on the grass. 415 00:38:58,703 --> 00:39:00,537 Every year he got a little closer. 416 00:39:03,775 --> 00:39:05,942 It was before that I think Roger was feeling 417 00:39:05,977 --> 00:39:08,378 that he can play just average tennis and he'll still win. 418 00:39:08,413 --> 00:39:12,682 But as Rafa was getting better and better he knew he had to raise his level and he-- 419 00:39:12,717 --> 00:39:14,817 I think he was feeling the pressure that way. 420 00:39:14,852 --> 00:39:16,753 Oh, he's got him again. 421 00:39:16,788 --> 00:39:20,790 I remember the clouds started to darken, the wind picked up 422 00:39:20,825 --> 00:39:24,427 and it was like Federer's mood was actually changing as the weather changed. 423 00:39:25,463 --> 00:39:27,897 His mood was probably darkening. 424 00:39:27,932 --> 00:39:32,168 So disgusted with himself Nadal still resists. 425 00:39:32,203 --> 00:39:35,938 It's amazing as well when you sort of see the way how this match has unfolded 426 00:39:35,973 --> 00:39:38,141 and you just sort of feel like-- 427 00:39:38,176 --> 00:39:38,908 Today's the day for Nadal. 428 00:39:38,944 --> 00:39:40,410 Today'sthe day. 429 00:39:55,993 --> 00:39:57,526 As the match evolved, 430 00:39:57,561 --> 00:40:00,697 you sort of sensed something special was happening because Nadal was winning. 431 00:40:01,566 --> 00:40:02,799 Federer was the favorite. 432 00:40:02,834 --> 00:40:07,136 He'd been the king of Wimbledon and won plenty of times already. 433 00:40:07,171 --> 00:40:08,772 But Nadal hadn't. 434 00:40:12,076 --> 00:40:16,212 And it looked like this was going to be his opportunity. So 435 00:40:16,247 --> 00:40:18,548 that created an enormous amount of excitement. 436 00:40:20,651 --> 00:40:24,454 But you just felt it was never going to be plain sailing, you knew that 437 00:40:24,489 --> 00:40:27,724 Federer was going to have an opportunity at some stage. 438 00:40:32,096 --> 00:40:33,163 The players are going off. 439 00:40:34,065 --> 00:40:36,098 Line judges off, everybody off. 440 00:40:36,133 --> 00:40:39,235 The umpire will stay up there probably and be pushed off the court. 441 00:40:39,270 --> 00:40:40,737 There he goes, bye-bye. 442 00:40:49,146 --> 00:40:54,851 You always think when a break is taken that it favors the man who's losing. 443 00:40:54,886 --> 00:40:58,488 Federer certainly is losing at the moment. 444 00:40:58,523 --> 00:41:01,624 This championship, well, it's hanging by a thread. 445 00:41:02,827 --> 00:41:05,895 I try to go back to the locker room as quick as I could 446 00:41:05,930 --> 00:41:09,666 because you don't know how long the rain delay is actually going to take. 447 00:41:10,535 --> 00:41:14,838 People sometimes cannot believe that all the players are in the same locker room. 448 00:41:15,740 --> 00:41:19,175 It's a very important moment because there you can resettle again, 449 00:41:19,210 --> 00:41:24,514 you can talk to your team, you can calm down again a little bit if you're panicking. 450 00:41:25,917 --> 00:41:30,787 We saw Mirka quickly outside of the locker room, which is very important, you know. 451 00:41:31,656 --> 00:41:34,690 She's also very positive, always believes that Roger can win 452 00:41:34,725 --> 00:41:36,659 and-- and that helps him a lot. 453 00:41:38,262 --> 00:41:41,631 I think the emotional part about me about playing 454 00:41:42,600 --> 00:41:47,770 really could be because I seeked perfection maybe way too early in my life. 455 00:41:49,774 --> 00:41:53,309 I thought I could play these perfect tennis shots backhand, 456 00:41:53,344 --> 00:41:56,846 forehands, drop shots, you name it, smashes. 457 00:41:56,881 --> 00:42:00,183 And I think I probably thought I could hit shots I saw on TV. 458 00:42:01,218 --> 00:42:03,553 The players I used to admire, 459 00:42:06,724 --> 00:42:07,590 Boris Becker, 460 00:42:10,194 --> 00:42:11,561 Stefan Edberg, 461 00:42:13,097 --> 00:42:14,197 Pete Sampras. 462 00:42:15,933 --> 00:42:18,167 They were the Wimbledon champions at the time. 463 00:42:18,202 --> 00:42:21,170 They were maybe the number one in the world. 464 00:42:21,205 --> 00:42:25,074 So I think that inspired me to play the way I played then. 465 00:42:26,043 --> 00:42:29,712 Very often I would come in and go like, okay, confident, happy and everything 466 00:42:29,747 --> 00:42:33,282 and then and I'd be like, bang, hitting a wall and realizing, well, it's not possible yet, 467 00:42:33,317 --> 00:42:35,585 you're not strong enough, you're not big enough yet. 468 00:42:35,620 --> 00:42:37,320 I don't know, you don't get it yet. 469 00:42:39,123 --> 00:42:43,126 Roger always had a certain expectation of the standard he wanted to play. 470 00:42:45,630 --> 00:42:51,134 When it didn't go his way, that's-- that's actually the point when he got so annoyed. 471 00:42:52,837 --> 00:42:54,570 So you can imagine my parents didn't enjoy it 472 00:42:54,606 --> 00:43:00,910 when I was behaving like a brat on the court, throwing rackets and shouting and screaming 473 00:43:00,945 --> 00:43:04,747 and crying and playing again and fighting. And it was just too emotional. 474 00:43:04,782 --> 00:43:08,217 It was just too crazy for them. So they would be very disappointed in my behavior. 475 00:43:10,221 --> 00:43:15,791 We sometimes, we felt really ashamed and we really took him many times aside and said, 476 00:43:15,826 --> 00:43:18,060 Roger, I mean, I'm not going along with you anymore, 477 00:43:18,095 --> 00:43:23,699 I'm not playing the fool next to the court while you perform like this. 478 00:43:23,734 --> 00:43:26,902 I used to tell him, you know, your bad behavior is like sending an invitation 479 00:43:26,937 --> 00:43:31,107 to your opponent and saying, here I am, beat me, I'm really to beat today. 480 00:43:31,142 --> 00:43:32,742 So, go ahead. 481 00:43:32,777 --> 00:43:35,978 And I liked to also get rid of my frustration. 482 00:43:36,013 --> 00:43:39,115 And I thought also it might have helped that John McEnroe or Goran Ivanisevic 483 00:43:39,150 --> 00:43:40,917 to play better in the process. 484 00:43:46,957 --> 00:43:50,726 Coaches told me it's not good for me that in the process I won't be playing better, 485 00:43:50,761 --> 00:43:55,431 I will be-- usually be playing worse because it's a negative energy that comes through. 486 00:43:56,801 --> 00:44:00,302 You could see he had talent but the coaches had to push him quite a bit 487 00:44:00,337 --> 00:44:04,007 a lot of time and he was-- he was testing the limits. 488 00:44:05,200 --> 00:44:09,120 Yes, so he was very young. He was the youngest of all the players we had at the time. 489 00:44:09,760 --> 00:44:13,080 There were still a lot of moments where he had difficulties concentrating. 490 00:44:13,400 --> 00:44:17,280 He had so much in him already, but he could not express everything yet. 491 00:44:18,640 --> 00:44:21,560 He quickly realized that working on his physical fitness, 492 00:44:21,600 --> 00:44:25,520 would help him to do what he enjoys most, playing. 493 00:44:25,560 --> 00:44:29,960 And to express even better what he can do so well, 494 00:44:30,000 --> 00:44:31,320 which is being creative. 495 00:44:33,204 --> 00:44:36,138 It made me understand my overall game, 496 00:44:36,173 --> 00:44:40,509 I have to come to the net, I have to try to finish, I have to try to take chances. 497 00:44:40,544 --> 00:44:42,912 And then as we evolve and you become stronger, 498 00:44:42,947 --> 00:44:45,214 I would get to balls I didn't know I could get to 499 00:44:45,249 --> 00:44:48,951 and then with my talent and my hand-eye coordination and my technique, 500 00:44:48,986 --> 00:44:51,254 I was able to pull off shots I never thought I could. 501 00:44:53,758 --> 00:44:57,193 And I feel like that connected everything. 502 00:44:58,763 --> 00:45:02,098 And I think this is when it got really a lot of fun for me. 503 00:45:11,041 --> 00:45:14,176 When Roger Federer was sixteen, 504 00:45:14,211 --> 00:45:16,012 people were already talking about him. 505 00:45:17,348 --> 00:45:19,815 Game, set and match, Federer. 506 00:45:19,850 --> 00:45:22,318 Two sets for love, 6-4, 6-4. 507 00:45:22,353 --> 00:45:24,253 He won Wimbledon poise 508 00:45:26,457 --> 00:45:29,225 and then turned pro the next day in Switzerland. 509 00:45:30,261 --> 00:45:33,863 In Switzerland we don't expect people to win big tournaments. 510 00:45:33,898 --> 00:45:36,265 So, at the time, especially not. 511 00:45:36,300 --> 00:45:38,201 We like to be precise, 512 00:45:39,136 --> 00:45:40,770 I generalize here, to the max, 513 00:45:41,572 --> 00:45:43,473 and you're supposed to be humble. 514 00:45:44,375 --> 00:45:47,843 So it's kind of interesting also when he came along 515 00:45:47,878 --> 00:45:51,914 and he basically said, you know, I want to win-- win big tournaments. 516 00:45:51,949 --> 00:45:53,916 And he wasn't really humble about it. 517 00:45:53,951 --> 00:45:56,486 And one of the first big matches he played was in Basel 518 00:45:58,389 --> 00:46:00,089 against Andre Agassi. 519 00:46:01,425 --> 00:46:03,493 And, you know, he went out there to win, 520 00:46:06,030 --> 00:46:08,964 which was almost like what is he trying to do, 521 00:46:08,999 --> 00:46:11,100 you're playing against Andre Agassi and you are a junior, 522 00:46:11,135 --> 00:46:12,802 you know, you're supposed to lose here. 523 00:46:12,837 --> 00:46:14,337 But he wasn't acting that way. 524 00:46:17,074 --> 00:46:20,142 But then the losing hurt, you know, it just really did. 525 00:46:20,177 --> 00:46:21,377 I didn't like losing. 526 00:46:26,650 --> 00:46:29,385 The number of times we would go to tournaments 527 00:46:29,420 --> 00:46:32,254 and he would throw in a substandard performance 528 00:46:32,289 --> 00:46:36,859 or he'd mentally break down and he'd get emotional, he'd throw his rackets. 529 00:46:37,995 --> 00:46:40,062 He was losing matches he should have won. 530 00:46:43,968 --> 00:46:46,435 I was too far ahead of myself. 531 00:46:47,471 --> 00:46:50,406 I don't want to say cocky but I think I probably thought I was better 532 00:46:50,441 --> 00:46:54,343 than I maybe was sometimes, that I could hit shots I saw on TV. 533 00:46:54,378 --> 00:46:59,615 He was all flourishes and beautiful trick shots but there was no identity to his game. 534 00:46:59,650 --> 00:47:02,051 Roger was getting very angry on the tennis court, 535 00:47:02,086 --> 00:47:03,919 he was breaking racket or whatever when he was young. 536 00:47:03,954 --> 00:47:06,556 But he was always respecting the opponent. 537 00:47:07,591 --> 00:47:10,626 It was always against himself. He was never being provocative. 538 00:47:10,661 --> 00:47:12,995 He was never being unfair. He was never cheating. 539 00:47:14,120 --> 00:47:18,920 He went through times when he was very, very hard on himself. 540 00:47:18,960 --> 00:47:21,160 He is very, very self-critical. 541 00:47:21,960 --> 00:47:25,880 It's difficult for an artist when he has a desire to express himself, 542 00:47:25,920 --> 00:47:28,600 and he knows how to express himself, 543 00:47:28,640 --> 00:47:32,800 but he can't actually express himself the way he wants to. 544 00:47:33,600 --> 00:47:36,120 And that's why at the beginning of his career, 545 00:47:36,160 --> 00:47:38,440 it may have taken a while, 546 00:47:38,480 --> 00:47:42,560 because there were so many things to put together in the puzzle. 547 00:47:44,361 --> 00:47:46,362 I'm telling you, people were rolling their eyes 548 00:47:46,397 --> 00:47:49,531 when I kept bringing him up in conversation. 549 00:47:49,566 --> 00:47:53,102 When I reached the stage of my career where I'm touring professional 550 00:47:53,137 --> 00:47:56,071 and I just thought, well, honestly, I feel uncomfortable doing this 551 00:47:56,106 --> 00:47:59,942 in front of ten thousand people, I don't like to do it when there's live TV watching, 552 00:47:59,977 --> 00:48:02,278 and I don't know how many thousands or millions are watching, 553 00:48:02,313 --> 00:48:06,048 you know, in their living room, me playing, throwing rackets and shouting 554 00:48:06,083 --> 00:48:09,518 and what is the commentary saying about me, I didn't like that. 555 00:48:10,654 --> 00:48:12,255 And I said, "I'll change from here on." 556 00:48:18,429 --> 00:48:21,197 I think each generation has their guy. 557 00:48:22,633 --> 00:48:26,135 Borg certainly was the player of his generation. Lendl. 558 00:48:26,170 --> 00:48:29,171 I was probably the player of my generation in the '90s. 559 00:48:30,374 --> 00:48:32,675 I felt like I was going to win that match. 560 00:48:32,710 --> 00:48:34,276 I just felt pretty confident. 561 00:48:34,311 --> 00:48:35,644 He was pretty young at the time 562 00:48:35,679 --> 00:48:39,181 but Roger was very tough. 563 00:48:39,216 --> 00:48:40,516 Oh, that's a great shot. 564 00:48:49,159 --> 00:48:50,426 I was caught off guard. 565 00:48:52,029 --> 00:48:56,131 He was serving huge, he was moving great, he was returning my serve with ease 566 00:48:56,166 --> 00:48:58,401 and just felt a little bit overpowered. 567 00:49:02,506 --> 00:49:03,940 Thank you . 568 00:49:08,245 --> 00:49:10,746 He's done it! The champion is out! 569 00:49:17,454 --> 00:49:20,990 It's tough out there. He definitely is... He's got a great future. 570 00:49:21,025 --> 00:49:23,459 I mean, he's already proven that he's a great player 571 00:49:24,695 --> 00:49:26,429 and that he's got a good chance to maybe go all the way. 572 00:49:28,699 --> 00:49:32,534 A new bat in tennis' past to a new generation. 573 00:49:32,569 --> 00:49:36,205 Federer can hardly believe it, the emotion at the moment 574 00:49:36,240 --> 00:49:41,010 of having beaten the greatest grass court player of all time is too much for him. 575 00:49:42,246 --> 00:49:47,716 Nineteen years of age and his first ever appearance on the Centre Court of Wimbledon. 576 00:49:47,751 --> 00:49:54,289 He has played a magnificent match to defeat the seven times champion 577 00:49:54,324 --> 00:49:57,093 in five extraordinary sets. 578 00:49:57,861 --> 00:50:01,163 You have to find your own identity and do it your way. 579 00:50:01,198 --> 00:50:04,200 Only I believe when Wimbledon rolled around in 2003, 580 00:50:05,402 --> 00:50:07,469 I felt like I grew into my own. 581 00:50:07,504 --> 00:50:12,207 I felt comfortable with the fighting spirit, the positive and negative energy, 582 00:50:12,242 --> 00:50:16,178 how to absorb and how to utilize it in the best possible way. 583 00:50:21,285 --> 00:50:22,818 Everything comes into play. 584 00:50:22,853 --> 00:50:24,853 So, there's just a lot of decision-making, 585 00:50:24,888 --> 00:50:27,356 a lot of mistakes you can do along the way, 586 00:50:27,391 --> 00:50:30,259 but one thing you can't is you can't do it perfect every single time. 587 00:50:30,294 --> 00:50:34,630 So you have to learn to play with problems and you have to learn how to play with pain. 588 00:50:43,000 --> 00:50:45,280 One therefore has to find this harmony. 589 00:50:46,960 --> 00:50:49,880 That's why it's crucial for Roger, 590 00:50:51,080 --> 00:50:54,160 that the man he is, embodies the player he is. 591 00:50:54,880 --> 00:50:56,640 That those two are one and the same thing. 592 00:51:16,874 --> 00:51:19,642 Everyone knew that Nadal was a great fighter. 593 00:51:21,145 --> 00:51:23,812 But with Federer, you know, he's naturally a front-runner. 594 00:51:23,847 --> 00:51:27,716 On grass especially he'd always for the last few years had completely dominated. 595 00:51:27,751 --> 00:51:30,486 He'd never had to come back from behind in that way. 596 00:51:30,521 --> 00:51:32,488 And so everyone knew that Nadal would fight to the end. 597 00:51:32,523 --> 00:51:35,724 But one wasn't quite sure how Federer would react to adversity. 598 00:51:51,909 --> 00:51:53,375 Hello. 599 00:51:53,410 --> 00:51:54,610 This has turned around. 600 00:51:56,446 --> 00:51:57,912 He loves to win. 601 00:51:57,948 --> 00:52:00,415 He's Mr. Nice Guy but he wants to beat you when he's on the court. 602 00:52:00,450 --> 00:52:02,818 He wants to find the solution to how to win. 603 00:52:03,854 --> 00:52:05,654 Game Federer. 604 00:52:07,824 --> 00:52:11,160 I believe that the rain delay probably woke me up and I said, 605 00:52:11,195 --> 00:52:14,196 well, if we're going to go out of this match, 606 00:52:14,231 --> 00:52:18,634 well, at least you're going to go down swinging and really start to wake up. 607 00:52:18,669 --> 00:52:21,770 You know if it does go to a tie break, it will be the last roll of the dice 608 00:52:21,805 --> 00:52:23,639 for Federer to see whether he can stay in the match. 609 00:52:29,813 --> 00:52:31,747 Game Nadal. 610 00:52:33,850 --> 00:52:36,619 Six, game two, six. Tie break. 611 00:52:44,561 --> 00:52:49,498 Neither player has lost a tie breaker in this championship so far. 612 00:52:50,834 --> 00:52:54,369 Federer's 103, he's played Nadal's 104, he's played. 613 00:52:54,404 --> 00:52:55,771 Something has to give. 614 00:53:13,657 --> 00:53:17,760 You have to find a certain intensity, I believe, that helps you through these moments. 615 00:53:30,707 --> 00:53:35,277 That's part of showing your opponent that you're really interested to win. 616 00:53:54,464 --> 00:53:59,601 Well, there's no mistaking what the crowd wants and it's no disrespect to Nadal. 617 00:53:59,636 --> 00:54:02,504 But I think they quite fancy some more tennis. 618 00:54:02,539 --> 00:54:04,339 Thank you. 619 00:54:04,374 --> 00:54:06,308 Federer certainly wanted to play more tennis 620 00:54:06,343 --> 00:54:08,076 and he still believed that he could turn it around. 621 00:54:08,111 --> 00:54:13,315 And it was amazing how he was able to-- to hang in there and-- 622 00:54:13,350 --> 00:54:17,720 and maintain the belief against the guy that we all know has caused him a lot of problems. 623 00:54:20,624 --> 00:54:24,260 This was someone trying to take away his crown in his own backyard. 624 00:54:28,098 --> 00:54:33,969 So, two sets to love down, you know, the way Federer dug in was-- was impressive. 625 00:54:36,000 --> 00:54:38,160 Federer's serve is much better than mine. 626 00:54:46,240 --> 00:54:49,000 He has won many games with his serve, 627 00:54:49,040 --> 00:54:50,800 in under a minute and a few seconds. 628 00:54:51,320 --> 00:54:53,160 That doesn't happen to me... 629 00:54:54,400 --> 00:54:58,000 so I need other virtues that he doesn't have. 630 00:55:09,005 --> 00:55:11,707 6-5, Federer. 631 00:55:32,028 --> 00:55:33,128 Federer. 632 00:55:34,865 --> 00:55:36,532 Federer game 2-6. 633 00:55:38,135 --> 00:55:40,969 Well, that wasn't so much of a cheer as an eruption. 634 00:55:42,080 --> 00:55:44,760 We reached the tie break of the third set, 635 00:55:48,000 --> 00:55:48,840 Rafael lost. 636 00:55:51,240 --> 00:55:53,600 Always, when we started, 637 00:55:54,080 --> 00:55:55,440 I used to say to Rafael... 638 00:55:55,480 --> 00:55:56,360 "Good face." 639 00:55:57,240 --> 00:56:03,400 When he started to train I always used to say, “Good face." 640 00:56:03,440 --> 00:56:04,320 Why? 641 00:56:04,360 --> 00:56:07,400 Because it's impossible to learn, 642 00:56:08,120 --> 00:56:13,480 to improve or do anything right when you don't have a good attitude. 643 00:56:15,080 --> 00:56:19,080 When he has had situations against other tennis players, 644 00:56:19,120 --> 00:56:22,080 that have overwhelmed him, 645 00:56:22,120 --> 00:56:25,240 well he has almost always been able to turn things to his side. 646 00:56:25,760 --> 00:56:33,160 And I think doubt or the uncertainty of not being the best... 647 00:56:33,960 --> 00:56:37,320 makes you try to do it better in some way. 648 00:56:38,640 --> 00:56:43,800 I've never considered myself good enough to just go and train, and just train. 649 00:56:43,840 --> 00:56:46,640 I've always gone training with the desire of improving. 650 00:56:47,600 --> 00:56:54,640 I believe he has no reason not to be humble... 651 00:56:54,680 --> 00:56:58,360 he has no reason to feel special. 652 00:56:58,400 --> 00:57:05,280 He's special when he plays tennis in New York or in Wimbledon, 653 00:57:05,320 --> 00:57:07,440 where there are 20,000 people in the finals. 654 00:57:08,120 --> 00:57:13,680 I don't think it is possible to stop being humble because you perfectly hit a tennis ball. 655 00:57:15,160 --> 00:57:21,960 I don't see the world as Rafa Nadal, the tennis player or tennis star. 656 00:57:22,000 --> 00:57:24,360 I see the world as a normal person. 657 00:57:25,400 --> 00:57:29,080 My life here is completely normal, like any of my friends. 658 00:57:30,920 --> 00:57:35,080 The feeling of belonging to Mallorca, an island, 659 00:57:35,120 --> 00:57:37,880 a place where you always feel comfortable 660 00:57:37,920 --> 00:57:41,880 and where you always want to go back because you think it is the place... 661 00:57:43,200 --> 00:57:47,240 that gives you the energy to continue with your professional career. 662 00:57:48,680 --> 00:57:53,160 I think for Rafael this is the place where he feels the tranquility 663 00:57:53,200 --> 00:57:56,320 that he can't feel in any other place. 664 00:57:57,240 --> 00:58:03,240 When he comes here, he feels supported by his friends, 665 00:58:03,960 --> 00:58:08,360 he feels the way he did as a kid. 666 00:58:09,280 --> 00:58:12,640 So Rafa, even though he's been traveling since he was young, 667 00:58:13,400 --> 00:58:16,360 he has always wanted to come back. 668 00:58:16,400 --> 00:58:19,600 I believe he has never imagined himself living anywhere but Mallorca. 669 00:58:21,280 --> 00:58:26,720 Here I can see my friends and my family every day 670 00:58:26,760 --> 00:58:34,080 and that makes my relationship with my family one of the most important things in my life. 671 00:58:35,211 --> 00:58:40,916 He finds his own way to feel comfortable at Wimbledon or Australian Open or French Open, 672 00:58:40,951 --> 00:58:45,287 whatever it is, he creates a home, you know, where it's not his own. 673 00:58:45,322 --> 00:58:47,322 He doesn't try to recreate what he's got in Mallorca, 674 00:58:47,357 --> 00:58:49,958 that's impossible, but he creates his own environment. 675 00:58:49,993 --> 00:58:53,762 You know, he rents a place and he's got his family there with him. 676 00:58:54,040 --> 00:58:57,240 You can spend some time with your family 677 00:58:57,280 --> 00:59:01,840 if they come over and you can have a positive and peaceful atmosphere. 678 00:59:01,880 --> 00:59:06,360 Sometimes I cook, sometimes someone else does. 679 00:59:06,400 --> 00:59:10,520 I like cooking, I have no issues with that. 680 00:59:10,146 --> 00:59:14,182 Everything is programmed in order to try to be as relaxed as possible 681 00:59:14,217 --> 00:59:16,952 and try to be as focused and concentrated as possible. 682 00:59:18,840 --> 00:59:24,040 I can imagine that Nadal, who is a great tennis fighter, 683 00:59:24,200 --> 00:59:27,160 has always looked for the challenge of solving problems. 684 00:59:27,200 --> 00:59:29,720 And I think that with Roger, it's the same thing. 685 00:59:29,760 --> 00:59:33,760 Maybe they each have their philosophy about how to solve the problem. 686 00:59:35,040 --> 00:59:38,800 Roger always needs to feel something positive, 687 00:59:38,840 --> 00:59:45,480 he always needs to feel the opening up of a possibility, a path, a solution. 688 00:59:47,017 --> 00:59:48,417 Pierre is definitely part of my mental game 689 00:59:48,452 --> 00:59:53,188 even though I don't feel like I do any mental work to-- for tennis. 690 00:59:53,223 --> 00:59:57,959 But our-- let's say if we catch up together and we-- we're working out, 691 00:59:57,994 --> 01:00:03,131 probably thirty percent of it is talking, you know, about possibilities, 692 01:00:03,166 --> 01:00:06,935 what could we change, what could we do, what else can we improve. 693 01:00:09,305 --> 01:00:12,340 "How's life at home, Roger?" And I'm like, I'll talk to him about it, you know. 694 01:00:12,375 --> 01:00:13,808 So I'm very open and honest. 695 01:00:13,843 --> 01:00:18,981 I think Pierre knows a lot about me more than most people in my life. 696 01:00:19,840 --> 01:00:22,400 He's always been himself and I think 697 01:00:22,440 --> 01:00:26,320 that this has been his great mental labor his entire life. 698 01:00:28,600 --> 01:00:31,520 I noticed that already when he was young, 699 01:00:32,040 --> 01:00:37,120 He always tried to find a balance between what he does and who he is. 700 01:00:38,101 --> 01:00:43,471 His attention to detail into his training, his-- his practice, his injury prevention, 701 01:00:43,506 --> 01:00:46,942 his schedule and-- and his matches is incredible. 702 01:00:48,078 --> 01:00:52,013 And I think sometimes he doesn't get the almost the credit he deserves 703 01:00:52,048 --> 01:00:53,481 because he makes it look so easy. 704 01:00:53,516 --> 01:00:57,118 He's a good phy-- physique that doesn't put too much stress on his joints. 705 01:00:57,153 --> 01:00:58,987 He's a great mover. He's well balanced. 706 01:00:59,022 --> 01:01:03,258 So people think, well, that's it's just natural, it's a God-given talent 707 01:01:03,293 --> 01:01:06,861 and he does have enormous talent but he works just as hard as anyone else 708 01:01:06,896 --> 01:01:09,231 at-- at improving all those attributes. 709 01:01:11,234 --> 01:01:15,970 If family and wife's not happy, then my tennis is going to wobble, you know. 710 01:01:16,005 --> 01:01:20,141 And then if this doesn't work out, the fitness is not right, then everything-- 711 01:01:20,176 --> 01:01:22,911 it's like a Jenga block building, you know, 712 01:01:22,946 --> 01:01:24,913 and everything needs to fall into place. 713 01:01:25,982 --> 01:01:28,850 My wife, who I met back in 2000 at the Olympics, 714 01:01:28,885 --> 01:01:32,020 I mean she-- she's been a rock, you know, in my life, you know. 715 01:01:32,055 --> 01:01:34,222 She's been there, gave me consistency. 716 01:01:34,257 --> 01:01:36,892 Is the guy-- is the guy you are with, is he very nice? 717 01:01:38,094 --> 01:01:39,428 Yeah, he's very nice. 718 01:01:42,031 --> 01:01:47,936 I think most important is that you're authentic that you're yourself 719 01:01:47,971 --> 01:01:50,438 and that's what Roger is. 720 01:01:50,473 --> 01:01:54,309 Off the court I think it's very important but also on the court, you know. 721 01:01:54,344 --> 01:01:58,513 If you try to show things that are not really inside of you, 722 01:01:58,548 --> 01:02:03,218 then it-- it doesn't work, the whole puzzle doesn't work. 723 01:02:04,320 --> 01:02:09,360 Roger looks for the perfect game. He seeks harmony. He seeks creativity. 724 01:02:09,400 --> 01:02:13,840 But we must not forget that Roger is also ready to fight. 725 01:02:15,880 --> 01:02:18,840 Roger is an artist who knows how to fight, 726 01:02:19,480 --> 01:02:23,280 whereas Nadal is a fighter who knows how to be an artist as well. 727 01:02:29,480 --> 01:02:31,400 It's similar to ballet. 728 01:02:33,680 --> 01:02:38,840 We don't see the effort, but we know that these people work very hard... 729 01:02:42,240 --> 01:02:46,520 to express grace, to express harmony. 730 01:02:56,720 --> 01:03:00,360 I think that controlling time is what leads you to success. 731 01:03:00,400 --> 01:03:03,120 The greatest sportsmen of history, 732 01:03:11,360 --> 01:03:14,000 have the mental capacity to think faster, see faster 733 01:03:15,720 --> 01:03:21,840 and make important decisions faster than others. 734 01:03:35,979 --> 01:03:37,846 Fantastic point. 735 01:04:59,228 --> 01:05:01,029 Game Federer. 736 01:05:04,701 --> 01:05:08,937 Six against oh, fourth set, tie break. 737 01:05:08,972 --> 01:05:12,140 He didn't really think that he was going to give this championship away 738 01:05:12,175 --> 01:05:14,309 after five years as the boss. 739 01:05:23,720 --> 01:05:27,422 Both players will receive one additional challenge. 740 01:05:27,400 --> 01:05:35,400 Rafa! Roger! 741 01:05:38,201 --> 01:05:39,567 Thank you. 742 01:05:39,602 --> 01:05:41,436 Thank you. Quiet, please. 743 01:06:11,067 --> 01:06:13,201 2-1, Nadal. 744 01:06:14,470 --> 01:06:16,471 Nadal takes back the advantage. 745 01:06:35,792 --> 01:06:38,793 As confident as we are, and we need to have that confidence, 746 01:06:38,828 --> 01:06:42,096 we also need to know the other side that it's always dangerous. 747 01:06:42,131 --> 01:06:46,701 Nadal is closing in on this Wimbledon men's singles title. 748 01:06:47,670 --> 01:06:50,605 You learn so much from the sport from winning, from losing, 749 01:06:50,640 --> 01:06:53,341 trying to figure out and just being uncomfortable 750 01:06:53,376 --> 01:06:56,311 and trying to fight through those-- those difficult moments. 751 01:07:10,760 --> 01:07:12,226 That's wide. 752 01:07:12,261 --> 01:07:14,362 That could be the crucial blow. 753 01:07:18,401 --> 01:07:21,202 Uncle Toni can't even watch anymore. 754 01:07:21,237 --> 01:07:23,037 Five-two, Nadal. 755 01:07:23,072 --> 01:07:27,442 He's coached this young man, his nephew, since he was four years old. 756 01:07:30,520 --> 01:07:32,000 I remember that... 757 01:07:35,080 --> 01:07:39,960 Rafael was up 5 to 2 with two serves, 758 01:07:40,000 --> 01:07:42,400 the match was almost won. 759 01:07:42,692 --> 01:07:46,294 And he is two points away from the championship 760 01:07:46,329 --> 01:07:48,630 and he will serve the next two points. 761 01:07:57,640 --> 01:08:02,360 At that moment I started to feel nervous. 762 01:08:13,840 --> 01:08:15,560 When he missed his first serve, 763 01:08:16,480 --> 01:08:20,680 I told Carlos Costa who was sitting next to me, I said, "Double fault." 764 01:08:20,720 --> 01:08:22,520 I didn't want to look. 765 01:08:24,000 --> 01:08:26,440 Once I missed my first serve, 766 01:08:27,320 --> 01:08:29,520 I had a feeling I might double fault. 767 01:08:32,808 --> 01:08:33,808 Fault! 768 01:08:37,280 --> 01:08:39,681 Five-three, Nadal. 769 01:08:55,198 --> 01:08:56,597 Federer is a champion. 770 01:08:56,632 --> 01:08:58,933 He has that mentality in him 771 01:08:58,968 --> 01:09:05,373 and started to see Nadal at the other end just shaken a little and a little scared. 772 01:09:11,314 --> 01:09:13,515 And Federer jumped on that. 773 01:09:15,718 --> 01:09:19,287 Set point or match point from here on in. 774 01:09:30,666 --> 01:09:33,468 6-5, Federer. 775 01:09:39,475 --> 01:09:41,442 Oh, he waited for it! 776 01:10:19,715 --> 01:10:21,983 8-7, Nadal. 777 01:10:22,918 --> 01:10:25,019 And that means championship point. 778 01:10:43,320 --> 01:10:46,240 When I was serving to win Wimbledon, 779 01:10:49,480 --> 01:10:50,360 I thought... 780 01:10:50,800 --> 01:10:52,120 “I'm gonna win Wimbledon”. 781 01:11:01,123 --> 01:11:04,892 I remember to be on the chair and do like phew! 782 01:11:06,429 --> 01:11:08,763 Oh my goodness! 783 01:11:08,798 --> 01:11:12,733 For Roger to hit a shot at that moment 784 01:11:12,768 --> 01:11:17,472 with that incredible pace off the backhand was jaw-dropping. 785 01:11:21,000 --> 01:11:24,240 That was the worst feeling I’ve had on a tennis court. 786 01:11:27,440 --> 01:11:31,800 I never think “I'm going to win.” Instead, I just focus on the next point. 787 01:11:31,840 --> 01:11:36,080 But that match was so important, I felt that the ball was there and I'd win. 788 01:11:37,593 --> 01:11:40,895 The two best passing shots of the tournament 789 01:11:40,930 --> 01:11:45,333 without doubt have just taken place on the last two points. 790 01:11:45,368 --> 01:11:46,500 It's eight all. 791 01:11:46,535 --> 01:11:47,502 What's next? 792 01:11:50,005 --> 01:11:52,573 Two championship points gone for Nadal. 793 01:12:18,134 --> 01:12:20,802 Sheer quality from both players. 794 01:13:01,610 --> 01:13:06,480 Roger pulled out the fourth set tie breaker and had saved a few match points 795 01:13:06,515 --> 01:13:10,551 because that seemed like it took it to this whole new level. 796 01:13:11,987 --> 01:13:17,191 Haven't seen a tie break like that since Borg-McEnroe 1980. 797 01:13:17,226 --> 01:13:18,459 It was up there. 798 01:13:21,497 --> 01:13:24,031 We really do have the classic confrontation here, 799 01:13:24,066 --> 01:13:26,901 the best server McEnroe against the best returner, 800 01:13:26,936 --> 01:13:30,438 and the most volatile player in the world against the calmest. 801 01:13:36,011 --> 01:13:39,880 On the court it was something special to see John's face. 802 01:13:39,915 --> 01:13:45,486 You knew that this is going to be a hell of a fight, this is going to be a hell of a match. 803 01:13:45,521 --> 01:13:47,221 And you have to hand it to both men. 804 01:13:51,594 --> 01:13:54,462 There hasn't been an inch given by either of them. 805 01:13:55,498 --> 01:13:59,099 They've both looked down the gun barrel and they're both still alive. 806 01:13:59,134 --> 01:14:02,169 I always get a hundred, and I wanted to win. 807 01:14:02,204 --> 01:14:03,471 That's it! 808 01:14:06,141 --> 01:14:10,778 That was the most memorable match in my career. 809 01:14:10,813 --> 01:14:15,817 And to win for the fifth time in a row, to beat John in the final, was something special. 810 01:14:16,952 --> 01:14:20,187 Borg and McEnroe is something that people are still talking about 811 01:14:20,222 --> 01:14:23,691 nearly forty years on. And-- and that will continue. 812 01:14:23,726 --> 01:14:26,961 So the number two player in the word just watching and seeing, 813 01:14:26,996 --> 01:14:30,798 waiting for the day when perhaps he'll have this chance to do that. 814 01:14:32,234 --> 01:14:35,870 I've spent the last twenty-five years of my life trying to figure out a way 815 01:14:35,905 --> 01:14:38,772 to remember the wins instead of dwelling on my losses. 816 01:14:42,678 --> 01:14:44,144 It goes for both Chris and I. 817 01:14:44,180 --> 01:14:47,214 We would have both won a whole bunch more if the other one wasn't around 818 01:14:47,249 --> 01:14:49,517 but we wouldn't have been as good a tennis player. 819 01:14:51,020 --> 01:14:55,623 At the end of the tournament we were the only ones in the locker room on Sunday. 820 01:14:55,658 --> 01:14:57,892 One of us was a winner and one of us was a loser. 821 01:14:59,228 --> 01:15:01,929 One of us would always be comforting the other one. 822 01:15:03,933 --> 01:15:06,667 I saw her in her most vulnerable moments. 823 01:15:07,970 --> 01:15:12,006 I think that Martina and I got to a point where it was like, you know, 824 01:15:12,041 --> 01:15:16,010 okay, the match is over, this is all about human compassion now. 825 01:15:17,379 --> 01:15:22,717 You embrace the fact that maybe this rivalry is bigger than you 826 01:15:23,719 --> 01:15:26,287 and you're a part of something wonderful. 827 01:15:27,256 --> 01:15:30,891 They share something, these players, I see it's when they retire, 828 01:15:30,926 --> 01:15:34,094 having spent time on the Champions Tour you see that 829 01:15:34,129 --> 01:15:37,898 that they're-- they're often happiest in each other's company. 830 01:15:37,933 --> 01:15:39,834 Certainly Borg and McEnroe Are. 831 01:15:44,740 --> 01:15:46,206 Game set match! 832 01:15:46,241 --> 01:15:47,742 He's won it! He's won it! 833 01:15:49,545 --> 01:15:53,280 When I did win it, I felt like I could fly for that couple of seconds or a minute 834 01:15:53,315 --> 01:15:56,918 when it happened because I felt like I finally earned it. 835 01:15:58,187 --> 01:16:00,621 But, at the same time, soon afterwards 836 01:16:03,025 --> 01:16:04,592 my greatest rival quit. 837 01:16:05,995 --> 01:16:08,329 '81 was my last year. 838 01:16:08,364 --> 01:16:12,099 I just lost my motivation for tennis. 839 01:16:13,369 --> 01:16:17,605 And then the worst thing came that I didn't care if I was winning or losing. 840 01:16:17,640 --> 01:16:18,839 And that's not me. 841 01:16:18,874 --> 01:16:20,741 He was retiring. 842 01:16:20,776 --> 01:16:24,411 He told us a few months after the Open when I played him in the '81 Open, 843 01:16:24,446 --> 01:16:26,847 he said I'm retire-- we thought he was kidding, we laughed. 844 01:16:29,785 --> 01:16:34,221 It felt like tennis was bigger than ever and we were on the cover of Sports Illustrated 845 01:16:34,256 --> 01:16:36,357 and people were talking about it and we were-- 846 01:16:37,292 --> 01:16:39,727 it was happening, you know, and I was like, "What are you doing?" 847 01:16:39,762 --> 01:16:41,261 I mean this is crazy. 848 01:16:41,296 --> 01:16:44,698 I couldn't believe that he was even thinking about it. 849 01:16:44,733 --> 01:16:46,967 I think it's too bad for the game and it's too bad for me 850 01:16:47,002 --> 01:16:49,170 because my best tennis has been against him but-- 851 01:16:50,205 --> 01:16:55,409 I did over the course of the next couple of years tried to talk him into coming back, 852 01:16:55,444 --> 01:16:58,679 or I wanted him to come back or when are you coming back. 853 01:16:58,714 --> 01:17:02,916 I would have been happy for him to come back and lose my number one ranking 854 01:17:02,951 --> 01:17:05,719 because I think he was that important to the game. 855 01:17:05,754 --> 01:17:07,254 And he was that important to me. 856 01:17:18,333 --> 01:17:20,300 And now, for the second year in a row, 857 01:17:20,335 --> 01:17:24,104 a five-set final between the two best players in the world. 858 01:17:24,139 --> 01:17:26,207 The way that mach unfolded, 859 01:17:27,242 --> 01:17:31,745 I remember the producer saying to me, "What can you see? 860 01:17:31,780 --> 01:17:34,982 What can you tell us from the statistics as we head into this fifth set 861 01:17:35,017 --> 01:17:37,118 that will determine the Wimbledon champion?" 862 01:17:40,155 --> 01:17:43,924 And I remember thinking stats right now just feel utterly irrelevant. 863 01:17:47,830 --> 01:17:49,463 Oh! 864 01:17:51,066 --> 01:17:54,368 These guys were doing their thing at a level we hadn't seen before. 865 01:17:54,403 --> 01:17:59,473 I think I felt like I owe it to the players, not to sort of be a loud-mouth and sort of say, 866 01:17:59,508 --> 01:18:03,377 "Oh, this is what they should do now in the fifth." That's a bunch of baloney. 867 01:18:03,412 --> 01:18:06,847 That's it. This is emotional, this is like heart and will. 868 01:18:10,519 --> 01:18:12,219 Game Federer. 869 01:18:12,254 --> 01:18:16,190 Now for the first time in three hours and thirty-seven minutes 870 01:18:16,225 --> 01:18:17,725 Roger is in the lead. 871 01:18:17,760 --> 01:18:19,927 It's something where you have to say, 872 01:18:20,996 --> 01:18:25,199 let's just watch this and enjoy something because this doesn't come along very often. 873 01:18:40,916 --> 01:18:43,183 Game Federer. 874 01:18:43,218 --> 01:18:47,421 That's the first time we've seen Rafa Nadal shake his head this entire tournament 875 01:18:47,456 --> 01:18:51,158 and why not, two match points and the fourth set tie breaker. 876 01:19:09,077 --> 01:19:11,011 Ah, it's brilliantly played! 877 01:19:24,459 --> 01:19:27,861 Two spots of rain here on Centre Court, I'm afraid. 878 01:19:27,896 --> 01:19:29,463 Getting a little heavier. 879 01:19:39,908 --> 01:19:42,576 The play is stopping and that is too bad. 880 01:19:45,147 --> 01:19:49,550 Three hours and fifty-six minutes, a first-class drama on Centre Court. 881 01:19:50,560 --> 01:19:55,240 The match was stopped at 2-2 in the fifth set, 882 01:19:56,640 --> 01:20:00,920 I thought the match was lost. 883 01:20:01,680 --> 01:20:04,920 That Federer had a better chance of victory. 884 01:20:07,960 --> 01:20:11,320 Rafa had lost twice before to Federer. 885 01:20:12,440 --> 01:20:15,320 He had had a chance to win, 886 01:20:16,880 --> 01:20:20,280 and it had vanished in front of him. 887 01:20:22,200 --> 01:20:23,880 I went to the locker room, 888 01:20:24,800 --> 01:20:28,960 because I thought I was going to find Rafael with very... 889 01:20:30,480 --> 01:20:32,280 very low hopes. 890 01:20:33,440 --> 01:20:36,320 I thought, "What can I tell Rafael to motivate him, 891 01:20:36,360 --> 01:20:39,240 to raise his spirits?" 892 01:20:41,160 --> 01:20:45,640 I don't know what Toni meant to tell me at the moment, 893 01:20:46,120 --> 01:20:46,720 but... 894 01:20:47,720 --> 01:20:54,320 I was prepared to take on the challenge and deal with adversity at every moment. 895 01:20:55,800 --> 01:20:59,240 And that's what I told Toni, that I wouldn't fail. 896 01:21:01,000 --> 01:21:02,960 Federer could win, 897 01:21:03,000 --> 01:21:04,800 but I wasn't going to lose. 898 01:21:07,280 --> 01:21:09,320 If he wins, so be it, 899 01:21:10,520 --> 01:21:12,120 but I won't lose. 900 01:21:13,735 --> 01:21:17,471 And those clouds are clearing off, those ones on the right. 901 01:21:35,590 --> 01:21:38,692 We are so very different in how we approach things. 902 01:21:38,727 --> 01:21:43,631 Yet, if you scratch only the surface, you realize that we're probably quite similar. 903 01:21:45,667 --> 01:21:49,670 Constantly thinking, thinking, thinking what could be my next play, it's like a chess game, 904 01:21:49,705 --> 01:21:52,039 you know, like there's always a next move. 905 01:21:53,208 --> 01:21:55,209 Wondrous forehand! 906 01:22:02,718 --> 01:22:04,151 Game Federer. 907 01:22:05,187 --> 01:22:08,555 Federer leads six games to five. 908 01:22:08,590 --> 01:22:09,924 Final set. 909 01:22:10,640 --> 01:22:13,720 I do admire Federer's style 910 01:22:13,760 --> 01:22:16,160 and those who don't 911 01:22:16,200 --> 01:22:19,600 either they don't know about tennis... 912 01:22:21,360 --> 01:22:24,720 even if you're someone else's fan, 913 01:22:24,760 --> 01:22:28,640 you need to be able to recognize excellence 914 01:22:28,680 --> 01:22:33,280 and Federer is excellent in every sense. 915 01:22:43,358 --> 01:22:44,458 Game Nadal. 916 01:22:45,727 --> 01:22:47,494 Six games all. Final set. 917 01:22:47,529 --> 01:22:51,465 There is no tie break in the fifth, a deciding set at Wimbledon. 918 01:22:51,500 --> 01:22:52,733 So we go on. 919 01:22:52,768 --> 01:22:54,969 It has to be two-game advantage. 920 01:23:20,729 --> 01:23:22,162 Game Federer. 921 01:23:27,836 --> 01:23:32,106 And Nadal will come out to serve again to stay in the match. 922 01:23:47,289 --> 01:23:49,289 Seven games all. Final set. 923 01:23:51,093 --> 01:23:54,728 Imagine being two sets to love up against a guy you've never beaten 924 01:23:54,763 --> 01:23:58,565 in the Wimbledon final before and then he starts to come back at you 925 01:23:58,600 --> 01:24:03,203 and he's starting to show everybody how he's won all of these Wimbledon titles. 926 01:24:03,238 --> 01:24:07,207 How Nadal held it together after that, I don't think I'll ever know. 927 01:24:18,854 --> 01:24:20,421 Advantage Nadal. 928 01:24:21,957 --> 01:24:24,491 Here is another breakpoint, the fourth of the game. 929 01:24:32,567 --> 01:24:33,767 Game Nadal. 930 01:24:38,340 --> 01:24:43,176 Nadal leads by eight games to seven, final set. 931 01:24:43,211 --> 01:24:45,746 The tennis was-- was incredibly good. 932 01:24:50,418 --> 01:24:52,286 The only concern is maybe the darkness. 933 01:24:53,922 --> 01:24:56,656 The court was almost being lit by flashbulbs at the end. 934 01:24:56,691 --> 01:24:59,159 It was painfully dark. 935 01:24:59,194 --> 01:25:03,730 Stopping a match for darkness is up to the referee. 936 01:25:03,765 --> 01:25:06,733 But because they are not reacting to it, 937 01:25:06,768 --> 01:25:12,672 okay let's keep playing until a point where it's-- it's getting too dark. 938 01:25:12,707 --> 01:25:18,178 There's been occasions where major events such as Wimbledon have gone on to the next day. 939 01:25:19,481 --> 01:25:21,681 This had just been too good to say, 940 01:25:21,716 --> 01:25:26,453 "Wait a second, we're going to stop and come back and play, perhaps, one game the next day." 941 01:25:26,488 --> 01:25:27,888 Let's try to finish it. 942 01:25:28,757 --> 01:25:31,191 Let's-- let's try to have a winner tonight. 943 01:25:56,218 --> 01:26:02,422 The five-time defending champion is at the mercy of Rafael Nadal here. 944 01:26:06,561 --> 01:26:10,397 Ah! Well, no wonder people stand. 945 01:26:12,968 --> 01:26:17,270 Three match points Nadal has had, three times he's been on the break 946 01:26:17,305 --> 01:26:20,774 and three times Federer has said no. 947 01:26:29,351 --> 01:26:31,451 Advantage Nadal. 948 01:26:59,614 --> 01:27:03,750 There is a new man at the head of men's tennis, 949 01:27:03,785 --> 01:27:06,019 Rafael Nadal. 950 01:27:07,355 --> 01:27:08,422 Six-seven. 951 01:27:09,324 --> 01:27:10,457 Nine-seven. 952 01:28:15,123 --> 01:28:17,457 Runner-up, Roger Federer! 953 01:28:40,982 --> 01:28:46,986 And the Wimbledon gentlemen's singles champion for 2008, 954 01:28:47,021 --> 01:28:48,955 Rafael Nadal! 955 01:29:05,974 --> 01:29:09,809 And the fact that you beat Roger here on Centre Court 956 01:29:09,844 --> 01:29:12,545 in arguably one of the greatest finals we have ever seen, 957 01:29:12,580 --> 01:29:14,981 does that make this even more special? 958 01:29:15,016 --> 01:29:16,083 Well... 959 01:29:17,685 --> 01:29:18,618 For sure. 960 01:29:20,155 --> 01:29:22,789 You know, when Roger, he after five years-- 961 01:29:22,824 --> 01:29:27,394 I lost the last two finals, close finals, but he is still the number one. 962 01:29:27,429 --> 01:29:28,695 He's still the best. 963 01:29:28,730 --> 01:29:30,463 He's still five-time champions here. 964 01:29:30,498 --> 01:29:32,031 And right now I have one. 965 01:29:32,066 --> 01:29:34,101 So, for me it's very, very, very important. 966 01:29:38,440 --> 01:29:42,008 And now having shared this contest together, 967 01:29:42,043 --> 01:29:46,012 they now share the limelight and rightly so. 968 01:29:46,047 --> 01:29:47,447 There's two champions there. 969 01:29:47,482 --> 01:29:48,915 No six in a row for Roger Federer, 970 01:29:48,950 --> 01:29:53,620 but the first French Open, Wimbledon Doubles since Bjorn Borg. 971 01:29:55,156 --> 01:29:57,824 We'll be talking about that match for decades. 972 01:30:00,128 --> 01:30:02,862 I think I'm going to say another fifty years of matches. 973 01:30:02,897 --> 01:30:04,931 And I'd be surprised if it's better. 974 01:30:04,966 --> 01:30:08,134 First of all, can I just say thank you as a tennis player 975 01:30:08,169 --> 01:30:11,471 that you allowed us to be part of this amazing spectacle. 976 01:30:11,506 --> 01:30:13,206 I mean is that-- is that any consolation? 977 01:30:13,241 --> 01:30:14,274 A little bit. 978 01:30:14,309 --> 01:30:17,544 Thanks, John. It's tough, it's tough, it hurts. 979 01:30:17,579 --> 01:30:18,979 In the moment itself, 980 01:30:19,014 --> 01:30:21,581 you know, I was like, "Oh my God, this is the worst day of my life." 981 01:30:22,684 --> 01:30:27,554 It was really-- was like a maybe three, four, five, six, seven weeks after the match 982 01:30:27,589 --> 01:30:30,023 that I really started to feel the magnitude of the match. 983 01:30:34,996 --> 01:30:36,863 These two haven't played each other since Wimbledon, 984 01:30:36,898 --> 01:30:38,765 so this is a treat for us and I'm loving it. 985 01:30:40,600 --> 01:30:46,000 Compared to the way things were for years, history was now being rewritten. 986 01:30:47,609 --> 01:30:49,109 Nadal has done it! 987 01:30:50,678 --> 01:30:54,948 I had to embrace the idea of a rival. 988 01:30:54,983 --> 01:30:56,950 In the beginning I didn't want to have one. 989 01:30:56,985 --> 01:30:59,185 Maybe I'll try later again, I don't know. 990 01:30:59,220 --> 01:31:00,887 God, it's killing me. 991 01:31:04,292 --> 01:31:09,229 And then, eventually, I realized there's something good to take out of these situations. 992 01:31:09,264 --> 01:31:11,664 So I maybe have to adjust my game a little bit. 993 01:31:11,699 --> 01:31:15,902 I don't like to do that per se, but why not? Let's go. 994 01:31:15,937 --> 01:31:18,071 This one title that he has not yet won, 995 01:31:18,106 --> 01:31:20,106 he's the guy who's got to prove himself. 996 01:31:21,643 --> 01:31:23,643 As much as you just only want to win, 997 01:31:24,913 --> 01:31:28,114 you also want to become the best player you can be in-- in your lifetime. 998 01:31:37,792 --> 01:31:41,160 I can't help but think that from the island of Mallorca right now, 999 01:31:41,195 --> 01:31:44,864 Rafael Nadal feels good for Roger. 1000 01:31:44,899 --> 01:31:46,733 Rafael Nadal! 1001 01:31:48,280 --> 01:31:51,040 The circuit evolves, the players evolve, 1002 01:31:51,080 --> 01:31:52,920 If you want to keep the same position, 1003 01:31:53,480 --> 01:31:57,080 you have to improve and evolve from the player you were 8 or 10 years ago. 1004 01:31:57,378 --> 01:32:00,280 Federer's fifteenth Grand Slam championship. 1005 01:32:00,315 --> 01:32:02,983 That breaks the tie with Pete Sampras. 1006 01:32:04,719 --> 01:32:08,655 I don't know if Roger would still be around if Rafael hadn't been born. 1007 01:32:08,690 --> 01:32:12,058 It's hard to stay motivated, and they kind of pulled each other. 1008 01:32:13,040 --> 01:32:17,800 They are always forced to reach their limit, to go a bit further, 1009 01:32:18,280 --> 01:32:22,440 but it's not about becoming better just to win, 1010 01:32:22,480 --> 01:32:24,960 but becoming better as a matter of life. 1011 01:32:26,374 --> 01:32:29,609 What makes it stand out from any other rivalry, 1012 01:32:30,411 --> 01:32:32,045 they're both exceptional people. 1013 01:32:32,947 --> 01:32:35,615 They both have such a respect for each other. 1014 01:32:36,784 --> 01:32:38,552 They both are very humble. 1015 01:32:40,600 --> 01:32:41,960 One can win... 1016 01:32:42,280 --> 01:32:43,480 or one can lose. 1017 01:32:43,992 --> 01:32:46,826 This year's runner-up, Roger Federer. 1018 01:32:47,996 --> 01:32:50,030 Nadal is the king of Rolad Garros. 1019 01:32:50,160 --> 01:32:53,560 That's part of our lives. 1020 01:32:53,600 --> 01:32:59,600 We need to know how to live with both, defeat and victory. 1021 01:33:02,010 --> 01:33:05,979 These two guys at their age with all that they've accomplished, 1022 01:33:07,181 --> 01:33:09,649 with a chance to play each other again. 1023 01:33:10,752 --> 01:33:12,318 Especially as you get older, 1024 01:33:12,354 --> 01:33:15,155 you start to feel like how many more opportunities am I going to have to do this. 1025 01:33:24,065 --> 01:33:25,365 Ladies and gentlemen, 1026 01:33:25,400 --> 01:33:30,804 the 2017 champion of the Australian Open, Roger Federer. 1027 01:33:32,273 --> 01:33:33,340 Thank you, guys. 1028 01:33:34,743 --> 01:33:37,310 You stand there on the podium, there's a standing ovation going on, 1029 01:33:37,345 --> 01:33:38,978 everybody's listening, you could hear a pin drop. 1030 01:33:39,014 --> 01:33:42,348 I don't think we both either one of us believed that we're going to be in the finals 1031 01:33:42,383 --> 01:33:44,417 of Australia when we saw each other. 1032 01:33:44,452 --> 01:33:46,986 And here we stand in the finals. 1033 01:33:47,021 --> 01:33:52,659 I remember also how I felt in 2008 and he must have felt the same in 2017. 1034 01:33:52,694 --> 01:33:54,227 What-- what can you say? You know. 1035 01:33:55,797 --> 01:33:58,931 Tennis is a-- tennis is a tough sport. There's no-- no draws. 1036 01:33:58,966 --> 01:34:01,968 But if there was going to be one, I would be very happy to accept the draw tonight 1037 01:34:02,003 --> 01:34:03,837 and share it with Rafa really. 1038 01:34:06,474 --> 01:34:10,443 I learned a lot from those matches and you-- you feel like almost you-- you grow up, 1039 01:34:10,478 --> 01:34:14,114 you know, and you have more experience in life because of these matches. 1040 01:34:15,183 --> 01:34:17,984 You start respecting each other more and more 1041 01:34:18,019 --> 01:34:21,688 because in those moments it's so personal, it's so intense. 1042 01:34:22,490 --> 01:34:26,426 I mean, there's no question that these two guys made each other better players. 1043 01:34:26,461 --> 01:34:29,462 The quality is better than it's ever been. 1044 01:34:29,497 --> 01:34:31,063 What a treat. 1045 01:34:31,099 --> 01:34:34,167 What a treat to have two of the greatest of all time playing at the same time, 1046 01:34:34,202 --> 01:34:35,435 you know, it's just-- 1047 01:34:36,938 --> 01:34:38,104 we're so lucky. 92362

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